Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Israel tells US of intent to launch ground op against Hezbollah in Lebanon

The confirmation came shortly after the IDF declared three northern border communities a closed military zone.

View of Border of Lebanon
A view of the border fence with Lebanon as seen from Kibbutz Misgav Am in northern Israel, Aug. 27, 2019. Photo by David Cohen/Flash90.

Israel has informed the United States of its intention to launch a ground operation in Lebanon to destroy Hezbollah terror infrastructure, U.S. State Department spokesman Matthew Miller confirmed on Monday.

“We have been engaged in conversations with them about those operations, but the timing, purpose, tempo of those—I’ll let them speak to,” the spokesman told reporters during a press briefing in Washington.

Miller’s confirmation came shortly after the Israel Defense Forces declared three northern border communities a closed military zone.

Civilians are “strictly prohibited” from entering Metula, Kibbutz Misgav Am and Kfar Giladi, all located in the Galilee panhandle, the IDF said.

The order, which was signed by IDF Northern Command head Maj. Gen. Ori Gordin, expires on Sunday, Oct. 6, unless extended by the military.

Meanwhile, soldiers of the Lebanese Armed Forces have been withdrawing from positions on the southern border with Israel, local residents and a Lebanese “security source” told Reuters. LAF troops were said to have pulled back at least three miles from the frontier.

Arab media on Monday night reported heavy IDF shelling towards the Lebanese border towns of al-Wazzani, Khiam, Kafr Kila and Odaisseh.

Earlier on Monday, the IDF announced that Gordin, together with the commanders of three divisions, approved “plans for the days to come.”

The military said that in recent days, its 188th Armored Brigade carried out exercises near the Lebanese border, while local security squads also held training drills simulating “various scenarios” in border towns.

According to a report in The Washington Post on Monday, Israel told the United States that a limited ground invasion could start “imminently.”

The campaign would be smaller than the 2006 Second Lebanon War and would focus on clearing out terrorist infrastructure along the border to remove the threat to Israel’s frontier, a U.S. official told the newspaper.

CBS News subsequently cited an American official who said the ground incursion into Lebanese territory could be launched “within hours.”

Israel’s Security Cabinet, which is responsible for defense-related decisions and composed of senior government ministers, was set to meet on Monday night at the Kirya military headquarters in Tel Aviv.

“There’s no reason that the process can’t be dramatically accelerated,” Dan Schnur, a political science lecturer, told JNS.
Katie Wilson, who promised when she was running for mayor to turn off cameras, said that she made the decision after an intelligence briefing from local and federal law enforcement.
“It is troubling that a stadium supported by taxpayer dollars would openly subsidize an event led by an artist known for pushing this dangerous, hateful rhetoric, especially with Florida having one of the largest Jewish populations in our country,” Sen. Rick Scott stated.
Toronto’s police chief said that there will be more barricades and officers in an effort to prevent a repeat of last year’s “gauntlet of hate” near the walk.
Mika Hackner of the North American Values Institute told JNS that “particular attention should be paid to the ‘local institutions’ tasked with carrying on” the foundation’s programs.
The House Armed Services Committee rejected Rep. Ro Khanna’s amendment to delete section 224 from the annual defense bill, which calls for increased cooperation between the U.S. and Israel.